CHESAPEAKE, Va. — John Randall and family recently received a letter from their sponsor child in Honduras. But instead of offering an update and gratitude for their continued support, 11-year-old Maria Salvador told them she was boycotting them.

“She said it was nothing personal, but her sponsor child union wanted better terms,” says Becky Randall, 34. “She asked us to please remove her photograph from the refrigerator and cease all communication with her until the strike is resolved.”

In a new wrinkle for child sponsor ministries, sponsor children in several countries have united to demand better terms. They are asking for $45 a month, up from the standard $28, plus a 7 percent annual increase, new uniforms, better medical care and more frequent gift packages from sponsors.

The strike organizers are mostly older teens who grew up in sponsor programs, but have been influenced by resurgent socialist movements in South America. The newly created Union of Sponsored Children is demanding that Americans “pay a fair price” for the “privilege of supporting the children of the revolutionary worker-citizens of South America.”

One girl, Carlota Garcia, 12, of Venezuela says she was always happy with the gift packages that included dolls, hair bows and school supplies from her sponsor family. But after attending a union rally she now believes she has not been getting her fair share.

“We deserve better,” she says. “We aren’t pets that will be happy with cheap toys.”

The Allen family of Pittsburgh, Pa., was bewildered to learn about the boycott from their sponsor child, Guillermo Montez, 9, of Bolivia.

“Our kids cried a bit when we got the cease and desist letter,” says father Jeremy. “I had to tell them it was just business, and we’d get Guillermo back when the strike ended.”

Jeremy, a former steel worker, says he felt proud that the sponsor kids were unionizing and “seizing their own destiny.” He has already complied and is sending $45 a month to Guillermo.

Sponsor organizations are scrambling to negotiate an end to the strike by Christmas, when they sign up the majority of their sponsor families.

But the child unions say they will hold out “however long it takes.” •